Benefits of interventional telemonitoring in patients with chronic heart failure
European Heart Journal

Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the effect of interventional specialized Telemonitoring (ITM) compared to standard telemonitoring (STM) and standard of care (SC) on preventing all causes of death, cardiovascular mortality and unplanned hospitalization in heart failure (HF) patients.
414 HF-patients derived from two French cohorts (OSICAT and ETAPES) were included in this study, and subsequently randomized into three groups ITM-group (n=220), STM-group (n=99) and SC-group (n=95). The telemonitoring was performed by the specialized HF-cardiology staff at a university hospital. During the mean follow-up period of 344 days, there were significantly fewer primary endpoints like unplanned hospitalization (13.6% vs 34.3% vs 36.8%, p<0.05), all-cause of death (4.5% vs 20.2% vs 16.8%, p<0.05) and cardiovascular mortality (3.2% vs 15.2% vs 8.4%, p<0.05) in the ITM-group. The multivariate logistic regression revealed a significant negative association between the ITM and unplanned hospitalization (OR=0.293 95% CI [0.160–0.535], p<0.05) and all-cause of death (OR=0.243 95% CI [0.099–0.596], p=0.002), respectively. Kaplan Meier and log rank test showed significant difference in median event-free survival in favor of ITM-group.
Using ITM to follow-up HF-patients results in reducing the rate of unplanned hospitalization and all cause of death.
Type of funding sources: None.
Contributors

A Matta
Author

R Itier
Author

P Fournier
Author

M Massot-Rubio
Author

M Rene
Author

L Lecourt
Author

M Galinier
Author

J Roncalli
Author

